Native American mascot controversy

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    Uranium Mining History

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    he most vital thing for a person to take into realization when looking at Native peoples in the late 1800’s is that they were being oppressed. Anti-Native American movements and legislation, at this time in history, was essentially at an all time high. The Indian Appropriations Act of 1871 ended the U.S government 's policy of treaty making with Native American tribes. This contributed to the destruction of tribal sovereignty because it took away the tribe’s ability…

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    behind and the representation of Native Americans has progressed. Today we have films like Rango and True Grit which although still don’t serve the ideal representation of Indians, have come a long way from how Native Americans were depicted during the era when stars like John Ford, John Wayne and Randolph Scott dominated Western Films. In Rango we have an Indian character who is known as “Wounded Bird”. Wounded bird is dressed in some stereotypical Native American clothes and is characterized…

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    After the end of World War I, Americans began to feel a distinct lack of national identity. They felt disconnected from their past and were unsure where the future was taking them. Compared to their European counterparts with their long and rich history full of art and literature, Americans felt that their country was inferior and provincial. A call to restore the American pride rose from the ranks of writers and artists, demanding the creation of a new history of the United States, one that…

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    Native American response paper This response paper will be on the articles A Tour of Indian Peoples and Indian Lands by David E. Wilkins and Winnebagos, Cherokees, Apaches, and Dakotas by Debra Merskin. The first article discusses what the Indian tribes were and where they resided. There are many common terms to refer to the native people including American Indians, Tribal nations, indigenous nations, first peoples, and Native Americans. Alaskan natives are called by their territories like the…

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    largely learned about in school, and the people 's freedom we stole from was that of the Native Americans. In Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, the author Dee Brown tells the story from the Natives perspective, and really shows how in most cases the U.S. government acted poorly in most Indian related matters. The mistakes the United States Government made, could have easily been prevented if they had considered the Natives as humans. In chapter 4, The Cheyenne, Arapahos, Sioux, and other tribes…

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    Pottawatomi Tribe Essay

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    There are a lot of Native American tribes out in the world that not many people are familiar with, Potawatomi is one of them. Before researching I did not know that this tribe still existed today. The Potawatomi Native American tribe goes back a long while in history. “Prior to the 1500 A.D. the Potawatomi tribe migrated to the shores of Lake Michigan” (Loew, 2001, p. 99). They have lived in the Great Lake region for at least four centuries (Potawatomi Culture). The Potawatomi tribe…

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    flash red anymore” Topic: The various ways that Native Americans have been oppressed. Thesis: Native Americans are the most oppressed minority in the United States. They suffer from horrible living conditions, plagued by poverty, sickness, terrible housing, and alcohol/drugs. Furthermore, society continues to neglect and mistreat Native Americans, and thus they have no way of being able to live a successful life. P#1 Living conditions Native Americans by far have to endure the worst living…

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    The Hunting Scene Summary

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    The scene starts off as Hunter’s father decides to take him hunting for the first time. Both begin walking through the forest dressed in camouflage and stocked with prime hunting rifles. Gunshots go off as other hunters nearby shoot off shots. Hunter and his father spectate the area and look around for a buck to hunt. His father instructs Hunter to keep his eyes peeled for a buck as he dozes off in a snoring slumber. A gunshot hits a tree nearby as debris falls near Hunter, as he stays…

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    the Mohicans tackles the racism of the Jacksonian era through a story based around the late 1700s. He portrays the racism through his characters, for example, the main character proclaims after just learning someone’s race, “A Mingo [group of Native Americans] is a Mingo, and God having made him so, neither the Mohawks nor any other tribe can alter him” (Cooper 29). This quote shows how influential race is in the Last of the Mohicans. In his novel, Cooper proposes, through metaphor, that a…

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    on August 15, 1893 and was an African-American male who lived in Weeksville, North Carolina for the majority of his life. According to my mother’s first cousin Lonnie Melton, both he and his wife, Hestor Sutton, had traces of Cherokee Indian through previous generations. In order to support his wife and seven children, Riley Cooper became a farm owner where he prospered through cotton and corn production. Although it is very uncommon for an African-American to own their own farming business…

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